Zotlabs/Module ============== This directory contains controller modules for handling web requests. The lowercase class name indicates the head of the URL path which this module handles. There are other methods of attaching (routing) URL paths to controllers, but this is the primary method used in this project. Module controllers MUST reside in this directory and namespace to be autoloaded (unless other specific routing methods are employed). They typically use and extend the class definition in Zotlabs/Web/Controller as a template. Template: <?php namespace Zotlabs\Web; class Controller { function init() {} function post() {} function get() {} } Typical Module declaration for the '/foo' URL route: <?php namespace Zotlabs\Module; class Foo extends \Zotlabs\Web\Controller { function init() { // init() handler goes here } function post() { // post handler goes here } function get() { return 'Hello world.' . EOL; } } This model provides callbacks for public functions named init(), post(), and get(). init() is always called. post() is called if $_POST variables are present, and get() is called if none of the prior functions terminated the handler. The get() method typically retuns a string which represents the contents of the content region of the resulting page. Modules which emit json, xml or other machine-readable formats typically emit their contents inside the init() function and call 'killme()' to terminate the Module. Modules are passed the URL path as argc,argv arguments. For a path such as https://mysite.something/foo/bar/baz The app will typically invoke the Module class 'Foo' and pass it $x = argc(); // $x = 3 $x = argv(0); // $x = 'foo' $x = argv(1); // $x = 'bar' $x = argv(2); // $x = 'baz' These are handled in a similar fashion to their counterparts in the Unix shell or C/C++ languages. Do not confuse the argc(),argv() functions with the global variables $argc,$argv which are passed to command line programs. These are handled separately by command line and Zotlabs/Daemon class functions.